When you buy a stock, you're buying a piece of a business.
So it helps to know one thing fast: does this business actually make money on what it sells?
Gross margin answers that in a single number, and it's one of the first things sharp investors check.
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Let's break down what gross margin is, how to calculate it, and what it tells you.
What Is Gross Margin?
Gross margin is the slice of each sale a company keeps after covering the direct cost of making its product.
That direct cost has a name: cost of goods sold, or COGS. It's what the company spends to produce or buy the thing it sells.
Take a simple example. A hardware store buys a bucket for $1 and sells it for $2.
- Sale price: $2
- Cost of goods sold: $1
- Gross profit: $1
That $1 of gross profit on a $2 sale is a 50% gross margin. Half of every sale is kept before other costs.
The Gross Margin Formula
The math is friendly. You can do it on the back of a receipt.
| Step | Formula |
|---|---|
| Gross profit | Revenue minus cost of goods sold |
| Gross margin | Gross profit divided by revenue |
Formula
So a company with $151 billion in sales and about $100 billion in cost of goods sold keeps roughly $51 billion in gross profit. That's about a 33% gross margin.
You'll find both numbers near the top of a company's income statement, which lists revenue first, then the cost of those sales.
Why Gross Margin Matters to Investors
Gross margin is an early read on business quality.
A high gross margin means a company keeps a lot from each sale, leaving room to cover everything else and still profit. A thin margin means there's little cushion.
It also hints at pricing power. Companies that can charge more than it costs them to produce, year after year, often have something special, like a strong brand or a wide moat.
Steady is the key word. A gross margin that holds in the same range for years usually signals a stable, predictable business.
Gross Margin vs Other Margins
Gross margin is the first margin, not the only one. Each one strips away more cost.
- Gross margin: sales minus the cost to make the product
- Operating margin: what's left after running costs like salaries and marketing, covered in our guide to operating margin
- Net margin: the final profit after everything, including taxes and interest
Walk down a company's income statement and you'll see the money shrink at each step. Gross profit comes first, then operating income, then net earnings, the profit available to shareholders.
Reading those layers is core to learning how to evaluate a company's financial health.
Where to Find Gross Margin
You don't have to calculate it by hand if you don't want to.
Public companies file detailed reports, and you can pull the numbers yourself. The key documents are the 10-K and 10-Q, a company's annual and quarterly filings.
You can find these for free on a company's investor relations page or through a quick SEC EDGAR search. Some sites charge for prettier versions, but the raw data is public.
Once you've read a few, finding revenue and cost of goods sold takes seconds.
How to Use Gross Margin in Research
A single number means little on its own. Context is everything.
- Compare within an industry. A software company and a grocery chain have very different normal margins, so judge a company against its peers.
- Look at the trend. Is the margin rising, flat, or falling over several years? A slipping margin can be an early warning.
- Pair it with other tools. Gross margin works best alongside metrics like the P/E ratioand free cash flow.
No single ratio decides anything. Smart investors look at the whole picture, the way they would with value investing.
This kind of digging is what separates active research from passive investing. If you'd rather keep it simple, owning an index fund skips the math entirely.
The Bottom Line on Gross Margin
Gross margin tells you how much a company keeps from each sale before its other bills. Revenue minus cost of goods sold, as a percent of revenue. That's it.
A high, steady margin points to a strong business with room to breathe. A thin or shrinking one is a flag worth investigating.
It's one of the simplest, most useful numbers in stock research, and a great first stop when you sit down to study a company before you decide to buy a stock.
Want company numbers explained in plain English? Join Market Briefs for free and get a sharper read every morning.
Find a business that keeps a lot from every sale, and you've found a good place to start digging.

